Gigacore
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I'm still a intermediate science student. I'm not understanding how to derive the ohm's law. can anyone help me?
ZapperZ said:It isn't derived in intro physics,
ZapperZ said:Actually, you CAN derive Ohm's law. It isn't derived in intro physics, but I think most people who take Solid State Physics see this in almost the first week of class when dealing with the http://people.seas.harvard.edu/~jones/es154/lectures/lecture_2/drude_model/drude_model.html.
When you arrive at J = \sigma E, that is essentially Ohm's Law if you remember that J is current crossing an area A, \sigma is 1/\rho where \rho is the resistivity, and E is change in potential over a unit length. So you do end up with Ohm's Law.
Zz.
Then what do you call the thing in Zz's link?dhris said:It depends on what you call "Ohm's Law". I believe it is common to call {\bf J}=\sigma {\bf E} Ohm's law, and V=IR is a special case of it. In this view, there is indeed no derivation
dhris said:It depends on what you call "Ohm's Law". I believe it is common to call {\bf J}=\sigma {\bf E} Ohm's law, and V=IR is a special case of it. In this view, there is indeed no derivation as it is essentially observational (although I believe you can use statistical mechanics to justify it in some way).
Gigacore said:I'm still a intermediate science student. I'm not understanding how to derive the ohm's law. can anyone help me?
ZapperZ said:Er.. that's puzzling. The whole thing was derived using the statistical distribution of free electrons, which is the starting point of the Drude model. So how is it not a derivation?
And I've only shown the simplest case. I could have easily pointed to the Boltzmann transport equation where a more rigorous derivation can be shown in which the Drude model is a special case.
Zz.
dhris said:Sorry! I misunderstood your answer (and didn't notice your link). I assumed that by "derivation" Gigacore was asking how Ohm's Law follows from the laws of electrodynamics, i.e. Maxwell's equations, and nothing more complicated than that.
Anyway, as a kind of related comment on the statistical mechanical models, I always had the feeling that the agreement with the empirically-established Ohm's Law was taken as a justification of the original assumptions, and not that I was seeing a convincing derivation. Even with the Boltzmann equation I seem to recall that you need some simplifying assumptions to get anything useful, which are then justified by the result. It was awhile ago that I encountered these things, so please correct me if this feeling is way off.
Manchot said:Well, the easiest way to "derive" it is to Taylor-expand the voltage across the resistor in terms of the current around a voltage of zero, drop the quadratic and higher order terms, and note that the current should be zero when the voltage is zero. Then, identify the resistance as dV/dI, and you're set. (Obviously, this doesn't give you much physics.)
ZapperZ said:Er.. you can't derive Ohm's Law from maxwell equations because of one important thing - you need to know how to treat a bunch of charges moving at random, which isn't contained in Maxwell equation. That's why statistical physics comes in here.
ZapperZ said:Actually, you CAN derive Ohm's law. It isn't derived in intro physics, but I think most people who take Solid State Physics see this in almost the first week of class when dealing with the http://people.seas.harvard.edu/~jones/es154/lectures/lecture_2/drude_model/drude_model.html.
When you arrive at J = \sigma E, that is essentially Ohm's Law if you remember that J is current crossing an area A, \sigma is 1/\rho where \rho is the resistivity, and E is change in potential over a unit length. So you do end up with Ohm's Law.
Zz.